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Invite colleaguesThe missing link: Transforming deep retrofits into financial assets
Abstract
Deep retrofits — those saving 50 per cent or more energy and achieving superior sustainability performance — are valuable yet largely untapped financial assets. This paper describes how to calculate all the value created by deep retrofits, radically changing the value proposition of deep retrofits, enabling such investments to take their proper role as a central driver of company performance. Many corporations have steadily improved the energy and sustainability performance of their buildings, primarily to minimise operating costs and keep pace with changing codes and standards. Many also have been searching for financially viable approaches to expand sustainability efforts to meet growing customer, employee and investor demand, but have struggled to link deeper energy/sustainability retrofits to attractive financial performance. This paper presents the ‘missing link’: how to calculate and present the value created by deep retrofits of corporate real estate. The deep retrofit value model for corporations consists of nine ‘value elements’ organised around a traditional business valuation framework that starts with an evaluation of retrofit property costs and risks, and then details how a deep retrofit affects business costs, revenues and risks. If implemented broadly, corporations will enhance their competitive position and financial performance while helping to transform global energy use to create a clean, prosperous and secure future.
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Author's Biography
Scott Muldavin CRE, FRICS, is President of The Muldavin Company, a real estate strategy consulting firm. For the previous 10 years, as a Senior Advisor to Delos, creator of the WELL Building StandardTM, Executive Director of the Green Building Finance Consortium and a Senior Fellow with the Rocky Mountain Institute, he has led the movement to scale sustainable property investment through improved financial analysis that fully integrates health, wellness, productivity and energy benefits into sustainable property investment decisions. In addition to leading The Muldavin Company, Scott cofounded Guggenheim Real Estate, a US$ 3bn private real estate company, was a lead real estate consulting partner at Deloitte, and has completed over 300 consulting engagements involving corporate real estate, investment, and valuation. He has authored over 225 books and articles on real estate finance, investment and sustainability, and was 2017 Chair of the Counselors of Real Estate.1